-
Final
LOU
HAR7
6 -
Final
LOU
HAR7
6 -
Final
SH
LOU11
5 -
Final
LOU
SFT12
8 -
Final
LOU
BAL18
1 -
Final
OTT
LOU3
4 -
Final
OTT
LOU5
10 -
Final
LOU
SH9
2 -
Final
LOU
WELL14
1 -
Final
LOU
WELL18
2 -
Final
BONSP
LOU6
8 -
Final
BONSP
LOU0
6 -
Final
TONG
LOU15
4 -
Final
LOU
GE0
3 -
Final
LAN
LOU1
4 -
Final
SFT
LOU0
3 -
Final
AC
LOU5
4 -
Final
CHA
LOU3
11 -
Final
LOU
EUD9
0 -
Final
LOU
EUD4
5 -
Final
PAO
LOU14
3 -
Final
PAO
LOU4
9
-
Final
LOU
FRON0
15 -
Final
LOU
FRON0
16 -
Final
LOU
OTT2
12 -
Final
LOU
FS0
16 -
Final
OTT
LOU7
6 -
Final
OTT
LOU12
2 -
Final
LOU
BAL11
12 -
Final
LOU
SH0
12 -
Final
LOU
SH1
23 -
Final
LOU
WELL9
7 -
Final
LOU
WELL0
11 -
Final
BONSP
LOU6
3 -
Final
BONSP
LOU5
8 -
Final
TONG
LOU10
5 -
Final
LOU
MV1
5 -
Final
LOU
FS2
9 -
Final
LOU
FS2
8 -
Final
AC
LOU7
10 -
Final
AC
LOU9
5 -
Final
CHA
LOU6
2 -
Final
LOU
EUD0
11 -
Final
LAN
LOU12
3 -
Final
LAN
LOU23
10 -
May 13, 430 p
PAO
LOU
-
May 13, 6 pm
PAO
LOU
-
May 15, 6 pm
BAL
LOU
-
Final
TONG
LOU50
77 -
Final
LOU
OTT34
71 -
Final
WAM
LOU32
40 -
Final
BAL
LOU55
36 -
Final
LOU
BONSP51
65 -
Final
LOU
HAR38
60 -
Final
SH
LOU70
37 -
Final
LOU
BAL39
59 -
Final
LOU
OZA32
63 -
Final
LOU
SMW29
56 -
Final
LOU
WYA63
38 -
Final
LOU
EUD46
65 -
Final
BONSP
LOU71
41 -
Final OT
LOU
PAO56
58 -
Final
OTT
LOU66
34 -
Final
LOU
TONG48
55 -
Final
LOU
SH41
57 -
Final
EUD
LOU47
46 -
Final
LOU
BVSW47
55 -
Final
PAO
LOU53
47
-
Final
TONG
LOU44
42 -
Final
LOU
OTT45
53 -
Final
WAM
LOU61
37 -
Final
BAL
LOU52
41 -
Final
LOU
BONSP37
49 -
Final
LOU
HAR48
38 -
Final
SH
LOU64
33 -
Final
LOU
BAL31
37 -
Final
LOU
SUN CH53
72 -
Final
LOU
EIS42
61 -
Final
LOU
WW50
18 -
Final
LOU
EUD34
61 -
Final
BONSP
LOU28
36 -
Final
LOU
PAO65
42 -
Final
OTT
LOU40
46 -
Final
LOU
TONG39
42 -
Final
LOU
SH60
72 -
Final
EUD
LOU42
10 -
Final
LOU
BVSW33
72 -
Final
PAO
LOU52
49
-
Final
LOU
BAL3
1 -
Final
OW
LOU2
0 -
Final
DES
LOU2
1 -
Final
LOU
WI TRIN0
2 -
Final
LOU
PIP0
2 -
Final
OTT
LOU0
3 -
Final
LOU
FRON INV1st
PL -
Final
BONSP
LOU0
3 -
Final
EUD
LOU3
0 -
Final
LOU
FS2
0 -
Final
LOU
GIR2
1 -
Final
LOU
LOU INV2nd
PL -
Final
LOU
PAO3
0 -
Final
SH
LOU3
0 -
Final
LOU
OTT INV0
5 -
Final
LOU
TONG0
3 -
Final
LOU
ATCH INV2nd
PL -
Final
LOU
OTT2
0 -
Final
LOU
WAM2
1
Holtzen earns state bid, breaks school record in the process
- Updated: February 24, 2021

Louisburg senior Cade Holtzen tries to keep Fort Scott’s Coby Burchett on the mat Saturday during the Class 4A sub-state championship match in Chanute.
CHANUTE — After his freshman year, Cade Holtzen set some big goals for himself.
However, at the time, it might have seemed a little out of reach. Holtzen garnered 45 wins his freshman year, which is the still the school record for most wins in a season and gave him a head start of possibly getting the school record for career wins.
It was going to be a difficult chore as Austin Hood, a 3-time state champion, set the record with 150 wins in 2012. Still, Holtzen has always had his eye on the prize.
“We had a lot of matches that year and I was put in a situation where I was able to get a lot of wins,” Holtzen said. “I have always had lofty goals and this was one of them.”
Holtzen rewrote the record books Saturday at the Class 4A sub-state tournament in Chanute. Going into the tournament, he was sitting at 149 wins, but the Louisburg senior won the 132-pound sub-state crown with a 3-0 record, which put him at 152 wins in his career.
It was an emotional day for Holtzen as he achieved milestones in each of his three matches.
Holtzen recorded win No. 150 to tie the record with a first period pin of Frontenac’s Peyton Wilderman. In his next match, Holtzen officially qualified for state in his semifinal match as he defeated Tonganoxie’s Noah Bailey in a 5-2 decision and also broke the school record at the same time.
“It was a really good day and I am really excited about everything that happened,” Holtzen said. “I was hoping to get it a little earlier, but to finally get the record made it a spectacular day. It is really awesome. Just want to thank my team, coaches and my parents for supporting me throughout this whole journey. Without them I wouldn’t be winning sub-state and breaking school records.”
Then came the sub-state title as Holtzen, who is currently ranked No. 3 in the state, outlasted No. 4 Coby Burchett from Fort Scott in a 4-1 decision.
“He is a tough kid,” Holtzen said of Burchett. “He was looking for some throws and that was something different that I haven’t had to deal with. I had to wrestle in better positions and a little more cautions from other positions in neutral. I feel like I could have wrestled better toward the end. I gave up a couple silly stalling calls there, but I feel I wrestled pretty good overall.”
It was the third title in as many weeks for Holtzen as he won district and regional championships the two weeks before. He now has a 35-1 record and is one of eight wrestlers remaining in the state.
“This is a big deal for me,” he said. “I said last year after my last match that my goal was to win a state title so that is what I am gunning for. Winning the sub-state title gets me that much closer to my goal. It will be tough at state and any of those guys can win it on any given day. It is a tough bracket, but I am looking forward to it.”
Holtzen has been a staple of winning for the Louisburg program as has earned two state medals in his three years and is looking for a third this Saturday at the state tournament in Salina.
“Cade has been a consistent force for our program for the past four years, and I was so excited when I realized that he’d be within grasp of breaking the school record this year,” Louisburg coach Bobby Bovaird said. “With all the uncertainty of Covid-19 this year, I was worried that Cade (and others) wouldn’t have the chance to reach his full potential this season. He’s been more focused and dedicated than I’ve ever seen him, and over the last four years, he’s very rarely lacked focus and dedication to any extent. He’s set a lofty goal for himself, and I think he’s within reach of attaining that goal.”
That other goal – winning a state title.
Holtzen will open the tournament against Pratt’s Kaiser Pelland, who he beat in the blood round at the state tournament last year. If he wins, he could meet Mulvane’s Chadwick Stahl, who is a 2-time state runner-up.
No matter who he faces, Holtzen is going to leave it all out on the mat in his final go-round.
“You can always get better, but mentally I feel like I am stronger than anyone in the state,” Holtzen said. “If it ever comes down to a close match, I am just going to gut it out more than they can.”